Section 2b. Electron shells, or energy levels, surround the nucleus of an atom Bonds are formed...

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Section 2b

Transcript of Section 2b. Electron shells, or energy levels, surround the nucleus of an atom Bonds are formed...

Section 2b

Electron shells, or energy levels, surround the nucleus of an atom

Bonds are formed using the electrons in the outermost energy level

Valence shell – outermost energy level containing chemically active electrons

Octet rule – except for the first shell which is full with two electrons, atoms interact in a manner to have eight electrons in their valence shell

Inert elements have their outermost energy level fully occupied by electrons

Figure 2.4a

Reactive elements do not have their outermost energy level fully occupied by electrons

Figure 2.4b

Ionic Covalent Hydrogen

Ions are charged atoms resulting from the gain or loss of electrons

Anions have gained one or more electrons

Cations have lost one or more electrons

Ionic bonds form between atoms by the transfer of one or more electrons

Ionic compounds form crystals instead of individual molecules

Example: NaCl (sodium chloride)

Figure 2.5a

Figure 2.5b

Covalent bonds are formed by the sharing of two or more electrons

Electron sharing produces molecules

Figure 2.6a

Figure 2.6b

Figure 2.6c

Electrons shared equally between atoms produce nonpolar molecules

Unequal sharing of electrons produces polar molecules

Atoms with six or seven valence shell electrons are electronegative

Atoms with one or two valence shell electrons are electropositive

Figure 2.8

Too weak to bind atoms together

Common in dipoles such as water

Responsible for surface tension in water

Important as intramolecular bonds, giving the molecule a three-dimensional shape

Figure 2.9

Occur when chemical bonds are formed, rearranged, or broken

Are written in symbolic form using chemical equations

Chemical equations contain:Number and type of reacting substances, and products produced

Relative amounts of reactants and products

Combination reactions: Synthesis reactions which always involve bond formation

A + B AB Decomposition reactions: Molecules are

broken down into smaller molecules AB A + B

Displacement (Exchange) reactions: Bonds are both made and broken

AB + C AC + B

Reactants losing electrons are electron donors and are oxidized

Reactants taking up electrons are electron acceptors and become reduced

Exergonic reactions – reactions that release energy

Endergonic reactions – reactions whose products contain more potential energy than did its reactants

All chemical reactions are theoretically reversible

A + B ABAB A + B

If neither a forward nor reverse reaction is dominant, chemical equilibrium is reached

A + B AB

Temperature – chemical reactions proceed quicker at higher temperatures

Particle size – the smaller the particle the faster the chemical reaction

Concentration – higher reacting particle concentrations produce faster reactions

Catalysts – increase the rate of a reaction without being chemically changed

Enzymes – biological catalysts

Quiz next time!